When Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press with
loose type in the 15th century, he cleared the way for the gradual proliferation
of the printed word.

It would seem an obvious second step to use the printing technology to
create a machine that could take over the cumbersome task of hand writing.
The engineers and inventors of the day were clever enough. A clock, after
all, has a mechanism that would seem far more complex than that of a typewriter.
So why didn't they build one until 400 years later?

The answer is simple enough. There was no need for typewriters
in a world where cheap labor was abundant and where machines were expensive.
It was not until the 19th Century, when industrial production was automated
and boomed, that the time was ripe for the typewriter.

And then, at first, only in the United States of America,
an underpopulated region where labor was scarce. It was there that mass
production of typewriters started in 1873, with the Sholes and Glidden
typewriter (pic 1). The event featured on the front page of Scientific
American (pic 6 - also see Library)

Soon the typewriter took its rightful place as one of the
great inventions of 19th Century communications technology, alongside
the telegraph, the telephone, photograpy and the gramophone. And, it gained
a respected place in wealthier homes, as can be seen in Pic 2,
a family portrait from around 1890 where the three men play the violin
(left), read a book (right) and write on a typewriter (center).

Development did not end with the first Sholes & Glidden,
despite the fact that this machine set a series of standards that are
still in use today, including the Qwerty keyboard. The strangest contraptions
were designed (pic 3) and built in the first half century of the
Typewriter (see collection).

And of course, the machine played its role in social history,
by forcing the way for women into the office (pic 3 - also see 'social
relevance'). Picture 5, finally, gives us a glimpse at one of the
many odd ways the typewriter played a role in history, here in de form
of a colonial advertisement.